Difference between revisions of "Wheel Of Fate"

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(New page: * '''Author''': Patrick Saint-Lambert * '''Publisher''': Harlequin Mystique # 89 * '''Year''': 1980 Her memory had been totally erased. Two w...)
 
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* '''Author''': [[Patrick Saint-Lambert ]]
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[[category:Category Romance]][[category:1980 Releases]]
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* '''Author''': [[Patrick Saint-Lambert]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Mystique|Harlequin Mystique]] [[Mystique By The Numbers|# 89]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Mystique|Harlequin Mystique]] [[Mystique By The Numbers|# 89]]
 
* '''Year''':  1980
 
* '''Year''':  1980
 
Her memory had been totally erased. Two women were in the car when it crashed. Only one survived: Eve Arlandy, rich young socialite. Four months in a hospital and thousands of dollars were spent rebuilding her face and body. But no one could restore her memory. Uncertainly she accepted the identity given her and was soon caught in a merry-go-round of treachery and deceit.  But when her past came flooding back, she knew there had been a terrible mistake: she was not Eve. Yet it was too late, for the real Eve had made a dangerous enemy. Could she play a dead woman's game without knowing the rules?
 
Her memory had been totally erased. Two women were in the car when it crashed. Only one survived: Eve Arlandy, rich young socialite. Four months in a hospital and thousands of dollars were spent rebuilding her face and body. But no one could restore her memory. Uncertainly she accepted the identity given her and was soon caught in a merry-go-round of treachery and deceit.  But when her past came flooding back, she knew there had been a terrible mistake: she was not Eve. Yet it was too late, for the real Eve had made a dangerous enemy. Could she play a dead woman's game without knowing the rules?

Revision as of 00:37, 15 August 2007

Her memory had been totally erased. Two women were in the car when it crashed. Only one survived: Eve Arlandy, rich young socialite. Four months in a hospital and thousands of dollars were spent rebuilding her face and body. But no one could restore her memory. Uncertainly she accepted the identity given her and was soon caught in a merry-go-round of treachery and deceit. But when her past came flooding back, she knew there had been a terrible mistake: she was not Eve. Yet it was too late, for the real Eve had made a dangerous enemy. Could she play a dead woman's game without knowing the rules?